# Seccomp filtering As a means to harden Cloud Hypervisor's security, the project leverages seccomp filtering. ## What is seccomp filtering A seccomp filter is a way for a process to tell the kernel which system calls are authorized. In case this process calls into a prohibited system call, the kernel will kill the process right away. ## How does it apply to Cloud Hypervisor Cloud Hypervisor is a multi threaded application. It spawns dedicated threads for virtual CPUs, virtio devices and HTTP server, along with the main thread representing the VMM. Each of these threads has a limited scope of what it is expected to perform, which is why different filters are applied to each of them. By default, Cloud Hypervisor enables seccomp filtering as the project believes that security should not be an option. For development and debugging purposes, one might want to disable this feature or log the faulty system call. ### Disabling seccomp filters Append `--seccomp false` to Cloud Hypervisor's command line to prevent seccomp filtering from being applied. ### Logging prohibited system calls In the context of debug, one alternative to disabling seccomp filtering is to log faulty system calls that would have caused the application to be killed by the kernel. Append `--seccomp log` to Cloud Hypervisor's command line to enable faulty system calls to be logged. The kernel running on the host machine must have the `audit` parameter enabled. If this is not the case, update kernel boot options by appending `audit=1`. Unauthorized system calls will be logged to the journal similarly to the following example ``` type=SECCOMP msg=audit(1423263412.694:7878): auid=1000 uid=1000 gid=1000 ses=3 subj=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:cloud_hypervisor:s0-s0:c0.c1023 pid=1193 comm="cloud-hypervisor" exe="/usr/bin/cloud-hypervisor" sig=0 arch=c000003e syscall=47 compat=0 ip=0x7f4f63982604 code=0x50000 ``` Provided `ausyscall` has been installed on the host, the system call can be identified with ``` $ ausyscall 47 recvmsg ``` ### Further debug with `strace` One more way of debugging seccomp related issues is to use the `strace` tool as it will log every system call issued by the process. It is important to use `-f` option in order to trace each and every thread belonging to the process. ``` strace -f ./cloud-hypervisor ... ```